Sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS, is one of the leading causes of death in babies from 1 month to 1 year of age. We reached out to pediatrician and SIDS researcher Rachel Moon, MD, for advice on safe sleeping for your baby and possible risks leading to SIDS.

Dr. Moon warned parents, particularly with infants under 4 months old, that bed-sharing is a factor in sudden infant death syndrome.

What’s the difference between co-sleeping and bed-sharing?
Some people use them as synonyms but they are actually different. Co-sleeping is when the parent and baby are within sound sight, and/or touch. Bed sharing (sharing the same surface) is a subtype of co-sleeping. What we recommend is a type of co-sleeping within arm’s reach but on a separate surface.

How common is bed-sharing?

It is very common. If you look at surveys, they will tell you anywhere from 25 to 75 percent of parents bed share any time at night. That’s what people are telling us, but actually numbers are probably much higher.

Suppose parents balk at the idea of not having their infants in the bed with them at night – whether for bonding, convenience, or economics?

My goal is to make sure you have a child to bond with at the end of one year. The bottom line is this: Is it worth the risk to take that chance? Even if you are doing everything right, your baby is at five times the risk of dying when you bed-share.

You can also bond with your baby when you are awake. Bonding when everyone’s awake is probably actually more productive and more useful in the long run.

Dr. Moon’s safe sleeping tips

Always put baby on his/her back for sleep

Don’t smoke around the baby

Use a crib with a firm sleep surface and place it next to your bed

Remove loose or soft bedding including blankets, pillows, bumper pads and stuffed animals from where your baby is sleeping

Use proper sleep clothing such as blanket sleepers

Avoid bed sharing and do not place baby on any soft cushiony surfaces to sleep

Use a pacifier, which protects against SIDS

Don’t overheat the room and don’t overdress your baby

Breastfeed your baby. If you nurse while sitting in bed, when you’re ready to go to sleep, put your baby in his or her own crib.

Make sure anyone who watches or takes care of your baby knows the sleep recommendations that you’re following

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